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Awards
OverviewFor generations, the Wrights of southern Utah have raised cattle and world-champion saddle-bronc riders—some call them the most successful rodeo family in history. Now Bill and Evelyn Wright, parents to 13 children and grandparents to many more, find themselves struggling to hang on to the majestic landscape where they’ve been running cattle for 150 years as the West is transformed by urbanization, battered by drought, and rearranged by public-land disputes. Could rodeo, of all things, be the answer? In a powerful follow-up to his prize-winning, best-selling first book, New York Times reporter John Branch delivers an epic and intimate family story deep in the American grain. Written with great lyricism and filled with vivid scenes of ranch life and the high drama of saddle-bronc competition, The Last Cowboys chronicles three years in the life of the Wrights, each culminating in rodeo’s National Finals in Las Vegas. Will Bill and Evelyn be able to hold the family together as rodeo injuries pile up and one of their sons goes off on a religious mission? Will their son Cody, a two-time world champion, make it to the finals one last time—and compete with his own son? And will the younger generation—Rusty, Ryder, Stetson, and the rest—be able to continue the family’s ways in the future? This is a grand and compelling work of reporting that, like Buzz Bissinger’s Friday Night Lights, offers deep insight into American ritual and tradition. And in telling the Wright family’s story, from branding days to rodeo nights to annual Christmas gatherings, Branch captures something vital of the grit, determination, and integrity that fuel the American Dream. An unforgettable book by one of the finest reporters of our time, The Last Cowboys is a moving tribute to an American way of life. Full Product DetailsAuthor: John BranchPublisher: WW Norton & Co Imprint: WW Norton & Co Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 24.40cm Weight: 0.552kg ISBN: 9780393292343ISBN 10: 0393292347 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 15 May 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThe Last Cowboys is a wonderful book about a way of life that has been vanishing for generations but refuses to become extinct. More importantly, it's a book about family, the land, the West, extraordinary courage, and so many broken bones that rodeo seems to be a form of revenge that horses and cattle administer to people. John Branch shows great compassion for the winners and losers of this unforgiving sport, and by the end you get that the sense that-despite all the odds, the development pressures, and the lures of Las Vegas-these may not be America's last cowboys after all. -- Eric Schlosser Hold on to your stetson! John Branch gives us broncs bucking, and bones breaking. Through masterful reporting and storytelling alchemy, The Last Cowboys is, at heart, a wise and tender evocation of family, a gritty way of life, and the American West. -- Gary M. Pomerantz The Last Cowboys is a beautiful book, threading deep reporting into a gorgeously written narrative. It is American portraiture at its best. -- Susan Orlean The Last Cowboys is brilliantly reported and beautifully written, mixing heart-pounding action with heartbreaking nostalgia. It feels both intimate and epic, timely and timeless. John Branch is a master of narrative nonfiction. -- Michael Finkel John Branch is simply one of America's best sportswriters and this book showcases every one of his talents. Deeply reported, lovingly told, and beautifully written, The Last Cowboys is a riveting portrait of a crazy dangerous sport and the vanishing landscape that made it possible. -- Stefan Fatsis John Branch covers sports the way Lyle Lovett writes country music-a fresh turn on a time-honored pleasure. With his story of the Wright family, kings of saddle-bronc riding, the classic rodeo event, Branch has composed a wonderful ballad of intrepid Old West men bucking a modern world that's going dry fast. -- Nicholas Dawidoff John Branch is simply one of America's best sportswriters and this book showcases every one of his talents. Deeply reported, lovingly told, and beautifully written, The Last Cowboys is a riveting portrait of a crazy dangerous sport and the vanishing landscape that made it possible. -- Stefan Fatsis Hold on to your stetson! John Branch gives us broncs bucking, and bones breaking. Through masterful reporting and storytelling alchemy, The Last Cowboys is, at heart, a wise and tender evocation of family, a gritty way of life, and the American West. -- Gary M. Pomerantz The Last Cowboys is a wonderful book about a way of life that has been vanishing for generations but refuses to become extinct. More importantly, it's a book about family, the land, the West, extraordinary courage, and so many broken bones that rodeo seems to be a form of revenge that horses and cattle administer to people. John Branch shows great compassion for the winners and losers of this unforgiving sport, and by the end you get that the sense that-despite all the odds, the development pressures, and the lures of Las Vegas-these may not be America's last cowboys after all. -- Eric Schlosser The Last Cowboys is a beautiful book, threading deep reporting into a gorgeously written narrative. It is American portraiture at its best. -- Susan Orlean John Branch covers sports the way Lyle Lovett writes country music-a fresh turn on a time-honored pleasure. With his story of the Wright family, kings of saddle-bronc riding, the classic rodeo event, Branch has composed a wonderful ballad of intrepid Old West men bucking a modern world that's going dry fast. -- Nicholas Dawidoff Packed with fascinating information, lively writing, and a certain pleasant nostalgia. -- Kirkus Reviews The Last Cowboys is a wonderful book about a way of life that has been vanishing for generations but refuses to become extinct. More importantly, it's a book about family, the land, the West, extraordinary courage, and so many broken bones that rodeo seems to be a form of revenge that horses and cattle administer to people. John Branch shows great compassion for the winners and losers of this unforgiving sport, and by the end you get that the sense that-despite all the odds, the development pressures, and the lures of Las Vegas-these may not be America's last cowboys after all. -- Eric Schlosser Hold on to your Stetson! John Branch gives us broncs bucking, and bones breaking. Through masterful reporting and storytelling alchemy, The Last Cowboys is, at heart, a wise and tender evocation of family, a gritty way of life, and the American West. -- Gary M. Pomerantz The Last Cowboys is a beautiful book, threading deep reporting into a gorgeously written narrative. It is American portraiture at its best. -- Susan Orlean The Last Cowboys is brilliantly reported and beautifully written, mixing heart-pounding action with heartbreaking nostalgia. It feels both intimate and epic, timely and timeless. John Branch is a master of narrative nonfiction. -- Michael Finkel John Branch is simply one of America's best sportswriters and this book showcases every one of his talents. Deeply reported, lovingly told, and beautifully written, The Last Cowboys is a riveting portrait of a crazy dangerous sport and the vanishing landscape that made it possible. -- Stefan Fatsis John Branch covers sports the way Lyle Lovett writes country music-a fresh turn on a time-honored pleasure. With his story of the Wright family, kings of saddle-bronc riding, the classic rodeo event, Branch has composed a wonderful ballad of intrepid Old West men bucking a modern world that's going dry fast. -- Nicholas Dawidoff The Last Cowboys is a beautiful book, threading deep reporting into a gorgeously written narrative. It is American portraiture at its best. -- Susan Orlean John Branch covers sports the way Lyle Lovett writes country music-a fresh turn on a time-honored pleasure. With his story of the Wright family, kings of saddle-bronc riding, the classic rodeo event, Branch has composed a wonderful ballad of intrepid Old West men bucking a modern world that's going dry fast. -- Nicholas Dawidoff Author InformationJohn Branch is a Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter for the New York Times. He is the best-selling author of Boy on Ice and The Last Cowboys, and has been featured in The Best American Sports Writing. He lives near San Francisco, California. 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